Unboxing the Nokia Lumia 1020

The Nokia Lumia 1020's retail package is the standard blue box that the company has been using for its recent models. The upside is that it really highlights the phone, often in a bold color that has become a signature feature of the Lumia line.

Other than that you get the standard set of accessories - a charger with a detachable microUSB cable, a SIM ejector tool, some printed manuals and a single-piece, in-ear headset.

The Lumia 1020 in Nokia's recognizable box • box contents

Nokia Lumia 1020 360-degree spin

The Nokia Lumia 1020 has a virtually identical body to the Lumia 920 (within fractions of a millimeter), with one big exception - the hump for the camera module. Spatial dimensions weren't 920's big problem, it was the weight, but Nokia had put its flagship on a strict diet and it's now some good 27g lighter.

It now weighs less than 160g, which is acceptable, considering a lot of that weight has went in to secure that lauded "tough as a brick" durability that Nokias are known for. To put everything in concrete numbers, the Lumia 1020 measures 130.4 x 71.4 x 10.4 and weighs 158g.

Nokia Lumia 1020 sized up against the 808 PureView and the Lumia 925

More impressively, the camera hump is smaller than it was on the Nokia 808 PureView. True, the new sensor is a little over a third smaller than the old one, but various camera improvements (BSI sensor design, OIS, wider aperture) should more than make up for the reduction in sensor size. We'll decipher the acronyms and camera terminology later on.

Design and handling

Looking at the front of the Lumia 1020, the smartphone is almost identical to its Lumia 920 predecessor and pretty close to the first-gen Lumia 900. The only giveaway is the fact that the bulging camera module makes it sit at an angle when placed on a table or other level surface.

The build and finish quality are certainly among the best in business, although we have to admit the design isn't as impressive as almost a year ago, when the Lumia 920 launched. But even if it's a little played out now, the unibody feels impressively sturdy and with the color being inherent to the material and not simply painted on, it will certainly last a for quite a while and scratches will be harder to spot.

The design is a bit worn out now, but the build quality and finish are supreme

At its launch, the smartphone will be available in three color versions - the yellow one is the so-called lead color, meaning that it stars in most promo materials, but there's also a black and a white version. There's a fourth version - red - but that's exclusive to AT&T in the US for now.

Nokia Lumia 1020 in black

Colors have become an important talking point recently - the launch of the colorful iPhone 5c must've given Nokia an extra measure of pride for having pioneered that feature.

All that's well and good, but a camera hump is not great for ergonomics and pocketability. The camera is in the upper half of the body, making it top-heavy. The polycarbonate is good to the touch, but not the most grippy and getting used to the weight balance may take a week or so - dropping your shiny (and pricy) phone would be heartbreaking.

You get used to it soon, but even after that, the camera hump will still be in your pocket. If we had to look on the bright side, we'd say that the Lumia 1020 is more pocketable than most digital cameras out there - certainly all that can challenge it in terms of image quality.

Even so, you have to look at the 8.5mm thick Xperia Z1 with a bit of envy - especially, knowing it has managed to sneak in a 20MP camera in this thin profile. Yes, the Z1 does have its own set of issues, too, but design-wise it's as mouth-watering as mobile tech gets these days.

It's a matter of balance and Nokia tipped the scales towards "Best camera" and away from "Slim" or "Compact." An understandable choice, considering the Lumia 925 and the 928 are very similar phones except without the camera hump at the cost of, well, the camera.

Display

The Nokia Lumia 1020 comes with the same PureMotionHD+ AMOLED display as the Lumia 925. There's Gorilla Glass 3 protection on top, to keep scratches away and provide extra impact resistance. The company chose to move away from LCD panels for its flagships after the Lumia 920.

The PureMotionHD+ AMOLED screen is pretty nice

AMOLED panels have the advantage to be slimmer, with more vibrant colors and far superior contrast due to the naturally deep blacks. Nokia has even supplied the Lumia 1020 will a cool color profile app that lets you tune the saturation and color balance to your liking. If oversaturated colors aren't your thing you can go tune them down to more realistic levels and if you like that effect you can go all the way up.

Display profile settings

The Nokia Lumia 1020's touchscreen also responds to gloves, which might come in handy when operating the flagship in the winter (Nokia is a Finnish company after all and winter in Europe doesn't come much colder than in Finland).

As far as image quality is concerned, the Lumia 1020 display performs excellently. It has good brightness levels for an AMOLED screen (it's on par with the Samsung Galaxy S4) not far behind the Lumia 920. Going from LCD to AMOLED was worth it, especially considering the excellent viewing angles and the deep blacks typical for the technology.

Display test

50% brightness

100% brightness

Black, cd/m2

White, cd/m2

Contrast ratio

Black, cd/m2

White, cd/m2

Contrast ratio

Nokia Lumia 1020

0

172

∞

0

398

∞

Nokia Lumia 920

-

-

-

0.48

513

1065

HTC One

0.13

205

1580

0.42

647

1541

Samsung Galaxy S4

0

201

∞

0

404

∞

Apple iPhone 5

0.13

200

1490

0.48

640

1320

Sunlight legibility is where the Lumia 1020 disappoints. It's on par with the Lumia 920 (not bad for a slightly dimmer screen), but the 808 PureView is still the king in this category after all this time, but even more telling is the fact that even the old Nokia N8 has a slightly better screen in direct sunlight. Meanwhile, the Apple and Samsung flagships are crowding the top.

For a phone that's so heavily focused on photography, it needs to provide a great viewfinder to frame your shots. The screen is good enough, but it should have been better.

Sunlight contrast ratio

Nokia 808 PureView4.698

Apple iPhone 53.997

Samsung I9300 Galaxy S III3.419

Samsung Galaxy S43.352

Samsung Omnia W3.301

Samsung Galaxy S3.155

Nokia N93.069

Samsung Galaxy Note2.970

HTC One S2.901

Samsung Galaxy S II2.832

Samsung Galaxy S II Plus2.801

Huawei Ascend P12.655

Nokia Lumia 9002.562

HTC One2.504

Sony Xperia Z2.462

Samsung Galaxy S III mini2.422

Motorola RAZR i2.366

Samsung Galaxy Note II2.307

Apple iPhone 4S2.269

HTC One X2.158

Nokia N82.144

Nokia Lumia 10202.103

Oppo Find 52.088

BlackBerry Z102.051

Apple iPhone 42.016

Sony Ericsson Xperia ray1.955

Samsung Galaxy Camera1.938

HTC Butterfly1.873

Sony Xperia V1.792

Sony Xperia U1.758

LG Optimus 4X HD1.691

HTC One V1.685

LG Optimus Vu1.680

HTC Desire V1.646

LG Optimus G Pro1.552

LG Optimus 3D1.542

Nokia Asha 3021.537

Nokia Lumia 6101.432

Gigabyte GSmart G13551.361

HTC Desire C1.300

LG Optimus L71.269

LG Optimus L91.227

Meizu MX1.221

Sony Xperia E dual1.203

Samsung Galaxy Pocket1.180

Sony Xperia tipo1.166

Samsung Galaxy mini 21.114

Then there's the resolution - a hard limit set by the OS, similar to the iPhone situation. Actually, 768 x 1280 pixels still adds to 332 ppi, which qualifies for the Retina label. Except for one thing - it has a PenTile matrix.

This means that it has two sub-pixels per pixels, and that reduces the perceived sharpness on some occasions. Windows Phone is quite adept at hiding PenTile matrixes. It's certainly not too irritating and you probably won't even feel the difference until you put the Lumia 1020 next to an Android flagship, but it's there.